5 standards-aligned lesson plans for the new school year

(Recent post, written for ISTE’s Project ReimaginEd! JOIN the community at http://connect.iste.org/communities/community-home?CommunityKey=cab064c9-11bd-4e9f-a89c-1cda5754da9a)
By Chip Cash 8/24/2015

In June, I wrote about five fabulous lessons you could “steal” from Project ReimaginED, a Gates Foundation-supported online community where educators discuss and share resources that are aligned with both the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) and the ISTE Standards.

With the 2015-16 school year upon us, I want to share more lessons from the Project ReimaginED library. So pull up a chair and listen to A Tale of Electricity, go to Europe to Discover French Regions, join forces on a Collaborative Habitat Project, sharpen your quills on Modern Julius Caesar and end by programing 3D nightlights with Project Nightlight.

You can use all of the lessons right out of the box or easily adapt them to fit your needs. Once you’ve read about them — and hopefully incorporated some of them into your curriculum — why not share a few of your own lessons on the Project Reimagined resource library?

Tale of Electricity. Fourth graders from Hardin County Schools in Kentucky researched, solved, engineered and presented solutions to electricity-related problems in this engaging, multidimensional project created by Jamie Chenault.

To set the tone, Chenault began by holding inspiring “kitchen table discussions” using prompts, such as the Thomas Edison quote, “I haven’t failed. I have just found 10,000 ways that do not work.”

Then students got to work, using Instagrok, a tool that creates interactive concept maps to research the principles of electricity. When they type in a topic, Instagrok creates a mind map to help them organize and make sense of the vast information available.

Next, Chenault gave students a collection of materials, including some that wouldn’t work, and asked them to complete as many circuits as they could. Students solved problems related to circuits, static electricity and switches.

Bearing in mind the Edison quote about perseverance, students recorded their successes and troubles and documented the process with photos and videos. Later, groups publish their results using Storyjumper, a tool that creates illustrated books that can be printed or shared online.

Chenault evaluated students using a rubric that measured individual progress as well as group contributions.

This project clearly addresses standards across multiple disciplines, including literacy, science and engineering, language arts, and potentially mathematics. It also clearly addresses the ISTE Standards for Students, as students collaborate on creative solutions to problems as well as presentation strategies.

I like that this project involves a rigorous approach to hands-on learning and is accessible to all levels of learners. You can expand the connectivity by challenging other classes from other schools, states or countries to solve electricity problems your students present and vice-versa.

Discover French Regions. This project, which combines French language learning with research and presentation skills, was a collaboration between French teacher Laura Rouse and library specialist Tina Laramie from Vernon-Verona-Sherrill High School in New York.

Students navigated Moodle to find and organize information, used multiple languages to create an advertisement for a specific region in France, and learned to find, evaluate and critique digital resources related to their region.

For example, students learned not to be “DUPED” by the internet, an acronym that reminds them to check the date, URL and purpose of a site and then evaluate whether it meets their purpose. After learning to evaluate websites, students examined four sites related to the project according to the criteria.

Rouse and Laramie assessed their students based on a rubric that measured student progress during the project as well as overall mastery of specific goals.

This project addresses multiple standards in both language arts and literacy, including:

  • Determining central ideas or themes of a text and analyzing their development (CCSS).
  • Summarizing key supporting details and ideas and assessing how point of view or purpose shapes the content and style of a text (CCSS).
  • Creativity and Innovation (ISTE Standards for Students).
  • Research and Information Fluency (ISTE Standards for Students).
  • Critical Thinking and Problem Solving (ISTE Standards for Students).

This project goes a long way toward teaching students how to find and evaluate the information they need to solve problems.  It is also wonderfully versatile in that it can be adapted for just about any discipline. You can bring mathematics in by having students investigate and report on the geometry of certain landmarks in a country connected to a world language they are studying. They could take it a step further by producing multi-language presentations to exchange with students in those countries for feedback.

Collaborate 21 Amazing Animals. This group project involved having second graders read, research, write and publish what they learned about habitats and animals. It was designed by tech integration specialist Jana Gudmundsen, teacher Sarah Kastner, library media specialist Rochelle Kovarik and principal Brenda Nilson from Park River Area Elementary School in North Dakota.

Students began by researching an animal’s habitat study, followed by doing a book study of an established author to build background for exploration of habitats and animals. They learned the research and writing process before compiling and presenting their findings.

The students worked in small groups using Padlet, a virtual bulletin board, to communicate how their animal interacts in its habitat and with other animals. Then they created a Puppet Pals video that highlighted their animals’ interactions within its habitat.

This well-researched and designed project addresses multiple standards:

  • Reading for understanding, writing, speaking and listening (CCSS).
  • Observing plants and animals to compare the diversity of life in different habitats forms the backbone of the specific content (Next Generation Science Standards).
  • Creativity and Innovation (ISTE Standards for Students).
  • Research and Information Fluency (ISTE Standards for Students).
  • Promote and model digital citizenship and responsibility (ISTE Standards for Teachers).

This is another fantastically flexible project. The reading, writing and publishing aspects could be a template for projects across disciplines and grade levels.

Modern Julius Caesar. Beth Crawford from Kenton Ridge High School in Springfield, Ohio, immersed her students in the language and culture of Julius Caesar by connecting the famous play to current world events.

She began by flipping her classroom. She had students watch a video at home in which she drew connections between Julius Caesar and modern-day real and fictional characters, such as Harry Potter, Vladimir Putin and Barack Obama. In the video she poses thought-provoking questions and then asks her students to answer in a shared Google Doc.

Students then created a modern version of one scene using Touchcast. The project received an international audience because Touchcast published the student work in the “educreations” section of its newsletter.

Although this project was created for advanced 10th grade students, the process of connecting a classic work to modern life can be applied to just about any work in any grade.

This project addressed many standards, including:

  • Exploring written text for deeper meaning, analyzing characters in a work, and producing clear and coherent writing (CCSS).
  • Creativity and Innovation (ISTE Standards for Students).

If your students are studying Julius Caesar, wouldn’t it be awesome to join forces with Crawford’s class and do a different scene? In fact, what if enough readers reimagined the entire play? Picture classes all over the world seeing Julius Caesar through the lens of their own world and combining their revisions with others. Come on, give it a try. Reach out to Beth Crawford on Twitter.

Programmable Night Light. Need a good night’s sleep? Maybe all you need is your own nightlight. David Held created a project that had his students designing 3D nightlights, printing them on 3D printers and then programming them. The project teaches design principles, programming, electronics and engineering.

Students used a free 3D design software, such as Tinkercad, 123D Design orProject Shapeshifter, to create their design, produce it on a 3D printer and install electronic components.

Students created their nightlights for a “proposed user,” which prompted them to imagine how to meet the needs of that specific client. They also demonstrated knowledge of hardware, software and design, using mathematics and technology skills in the process.

This project addresses a wide range of standards, including:

  • Modeling (CCSS).
  • Solving algebraic equations (CCSS).
  • Representing vector and matrix quantities (CCSS).
  • Solving real-life problems using algebraic structures (CCSS).
  • Integrating and presenting knowledge and ideas (CCSS).
  • Creativity and Innovation (ISTE Standards for Students).
  • Communication and Collaboration (ISTE Standards for Students).
  • Critical Thinking, Problem Solving and Decision Making (ISTE Standards for Students).

If ever there was a clear project that put the A in STEAM, this is it!

I’ve barely scratched the surface of what these amazing projects hold for your students. And there are more where these came from on the Project ReimaginED community!

If you have your own exemplary lesson, consider sharing it! Join the free community, then take some time to browse the Project ReimaginED library and submit your own lesson or project. Students all over the world will be glad you did!

Submit your standards-aligned resources for a chance to win a major discount on ISTE 2016 registration! Find out how easy it is!

Chip Cash is a veteran high school math teacher who has worked to bring tech integration and high-level programming into mathematics for 30 years. He teaches at Princeton Day School and is a network leader for ISTE’s Project ReimaginED.

How Can I Create Reflective Scholars?

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Chip Helps StudentAs you might’ve read in a previous post (https://njcashman.edublogs.org/?p=72), I attended the ECET2 conference in Seattle, Washington (Elevating and Celebrating Effective Teachers and Teaching) in the middle of July. While there, I attended a session entitled “Creating Reflective Scholars”, presented by Amanda Yoshida, which was all about encouraging and facilitating self-monitoring in students. Because I believe that students should take responsibility for their learning (see earlier post about grading), this appealed to me greatly. I took some notes and set them aside for awhile, just to let the ideas settle a bit, but with school starting in just a few weeks (gulp!) I needed to flesh this out a little.

What are reflective scholars? A quick search brings no solid answers, unfortunately. Currently, my students spend a lot of time attempting tasks I give them to do (the idea that they should originate these tasks is perhaps the subject of a future post?). They dutifully work the problems, do the project, etc. and then rely on me to tell me how they did. Once I do, they move on to the next task. This reminds me like what I read on a shampoo bottle (you read them, right?) wash, rinse, repeat! In this way, I am not encouraging my students to be reflective scholars. They are not thinking about how they are progressing as they work, they’re just trying to get things done. Ms. Yoshida defined them this way: “Reflective Scholars assume responsibility of their learning through reflection; they reflect on their progress toward the learning objective academically, and scholars are able to identify appropriate next steps in their learning.”

Considering my own thoughts and the ideas raised in this session, I considered how my students already kept track of their progress, but that progress was summative. The open gradebooks in Schoology (see www.schoology.com), our learning management system, (LMS) allows students to monitor grades. I know I can immediately improve this practice if what the students receive centers more on formative feedback, but that is still me reflecting to the students, not the students reflecting on their own learning. Here are some things I have used, and intend to use this year. Some I gleaned from this session, some I have used before.

Reflective responses after summative assessments

As a mathematics teacher, I give summative assessments. After each one, I ask students to respond to these questions:

1: List the questions you did correctly, and the accompanying standards or concepts. What did this test demonstrate about mastery in these areas, and what evidence is shown?

2: Toward which standards or concepts did the work on this test show progression, and how did the work show this?

3: What strategies did you use to be successful with the standards mastered? What preparation or test strategies did not work?

4: What is your plan of action (being specific here) that you will use to fully master the standards that are in progress?

While this practice seems to both fit the definition of developing reflective scholars and be effective for some of my students in helping them shape learning strategies, other students derived little benefit because they were not accustomed to thinking this way. To help, I’ve employed other strategies such as using polling through my LMS (in this case, Schoology)bbba10ce0e6d47ea1097f020d9415a66 asking students to simply rate their confidence with the topic at the end of class; using Socrative (see www.socrative.com) to ask a couple of key exit questions (can also use googleforms for this); and using journaling or discussion questions on the LMS to find out what students are thinking about their learning. There are simpler versions of this, of course, including ‘fist to five’ rating system of comfort or self-assessment of progress (see, for example,  http://tinyurl.com/pslbn23).

This school year, I intend to try some ideas I learned from the session (or the thinking it inspired).

Thank you, Missbresources.comPut a ‘learning thermometer’ in the classroom and ask students to put sticker or post-it note on it at the beginning and again at the end of class; (see missbresources.com for this thermometer)

 

Have students share their biggest or favorite ‘fail’ of the day and what they learned from it (remembering that fail is an acronym for ‘first attempt in learning’)

Use something like futureme.org, or some other email scheduler, to have students create goals for the next class, next assessment or next term;

Incorporating a technique like ‘My Favorite No” as seen in this Teaching Channel Video (https://www.teachingchannel.org/videos/class-warm-up-routine) to have students reflect on what they learn from their errors.

 

CL Society 09: Photocopies

Francisco Osorio via Compfight

Possible pitfalls If students do not see me reflecting on my progress and acknowledging my challenges they will not either. I have to walk, not just talk. Second, until students get comfortable ‘going public’ with their reflections, I need to give them opportunities to be publicly anonymous (e.g. post-it notes without names first) but privately transparent (journaling, reflective paragraphs, voxer messages, etc.) Additionally, incorporating growth mindset language in my own reflections and asking for it from students should help reinforce that success in learning mathematics requires work, perseverance, frustration and challenge. How great, though, would it be for a student to look back over their reflections to see their own journey of growth? That would be awesome!

I’d love to hear your plans for helping develop reflective scholars in your classroom, especially from other high school teachers. What has worked? What didn’t? Better yet, I’d love to connect on twitter or voxer to share those thoughts!

Shout out to Amanda Yoshida for leading this session and for widely sharing her ideas and resources! Follow her on twitter @ayoshida22.

5 Geometry Construction Videos You’ll ‘Flip’ for

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Years ago, when I was teaching Geometry using Discovering Geometry (probably edition 2), I found there were zero videos on how to do constructions. Using a tripod and video camera (state of the art then) I made these videos for students to watch at home to practice. As Comcast is eliminating personal websites, I found my old (2002!) site with these videos. Feel free to use, copy and post with credit! (Caveat: These are not new videos. Visual quality is not HD!)